Wives have become widows, parents long for captured sons, classrooms are empty and farmers can t find the hands to work the land. Unlikely friendships have formed; old ones have fallen apart.Even in the village of Lozuvatka, about 100 km (60 miles) from the frontlines, signs are everywhere of a two-
Even in the village of Lozuvatka, about 100 km (60 miles) from the frontlines, signs are everywhere of a two-year-old war that has irrevocably changed the face of Ukraine. Alona Onyshchuk and her five-year-old daughter Anhelina visited Lozuvatka's graveyard on a snowswept winter's day. Similar burial plots have appeared across the country, bearing bitter testament to a grinding war against Russia that's now entering its third year, with no end in sight.
Wives have become widows, parents long for captured sons, classrooms are empty and farmers can't find the hands to work the land. Unlikely friendships have formed; old ones have fallen apart.
LOZUVATKA, Ukraine Wives have become widows, parents long for captured sons, classrooms are empty and farmers can't find the hands to work the land. Unlikely friendships have formed; old ones have fallen apart. Even in the village of Lozuvatka, about 100 km from the frontlines, signs are everywhere of a two-year-old war that has irrevocably changed the face of.